Jacob Champion <pchamp...@vmware.com> writes:
> On Fri, 2021-01-29 at 17:30 -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
>> What happens if ALTER USER RENAME is done while the session is still
>> alive?

> IMO the authenticated identity should be write-once. Especially since
> one of my goals is to have greater auditability into events as they've
> actually happened. So ALTER USER RENAME should have no effect.

> This also doesn't really affect third-party auth methods. If I'm bound
> as pchamp...@example.com and a superuser changes my username to tlane,
> you _definitely_ don't want to see my authenticated identity change to 
> tl...@example.com. That's not who I am.

Ah.  So basically, this comes into play when you consider that some
outside-the-database entity is your "real" authenticated identity.
That seems reasonable when using Kerberos or the like, though it's
not real meaningful for traditional password-type authentication.
I'd misunderstood your point before.

So, if we store this "real" identity, is there any security issue
involved in exposing it to other users (via pg_stat_activity or
whatever)?

I remain concerned about the cost and inconvenience of exposing
it via log_line_prefix, but at least that shouldn't be visible
to anyone who's not entitled to know who's logged in ...

                        regards, tom lane


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